Moved wager on to a smaller house beside the smallest closets ever. How can I brand name them work/designed?


Answers:    I would use a combination of stacked cubes (so that you can use all the vertical space of your closet) and limp rods. Depending on the height, you may be capable of get away near two rows of hanging space. First determine how much if your clothing requirements to be hanged, or which can be folded, or if your shoes would be stored on this closet, and design suitably.
Use a double barreled approach. Make the most of the closet and also find places other than the closet to put things. Think RV and camper. They own very controlled space yet tons of storage. In the closet itself use the double rod approach contained by about partly the space (a high and low rod) to double floppy space. Reserve some space for longer garments. Look for the space saver hanger that are much like a hanger next to a chain of loops attached so that 4 garmets swing in one hanger space one below the other for the longer spaced side too. There are also shoe hanger and othr hangers for over the closet door to expand space. There are devices that trade name a rid you can pull down at the really top of the closet which could be more useful that an closet shelf. That could even afford you tripple decker rods.

Consider a free standing closet (about $29 on sale at Lowes and sometimes WallMart contained by the laundry and shelving area) in another constituent of the house like the laundry nouns or in an unused corner fo the bedroom or even an armoire that have hanging space to one side.

Use stack cubes or a double distance from the ground narrow dresser for things that can be folded, Get risers to hoist the bed legs about 3 inches ($19.95-29.95 at ace) and use below the bed storage boxes for out of season things or even one for current things or consider the drawers that fit under a bed. Look up. How much space is here between the top of various things and the celing where on earth you could put a shelf or two or a cainet? For ex in one house where on earth we lived the bedroom TV sat on a small chest wth drawers. It be not a lot of work to put an approachable self and then a closed cabinet style shelf over it. We used enormously narrow shelves respectively side of the TV just around a video tape length to hold tape and a few other things. Stained them to match the chest. It not individual made a lot more storage it created a built contained by look cheaply which in turn made the room look bigger and the relatively small TV look approaching a more expensive one. The cabinet held a stack of sweats, T's and other foldable clothes. The chest made an extra dresser that held jeans and such. Overhead cabinets contained by kids rooms can be made a part of the decorations by putting bright pictures on the doors that clash the room theme or hot glue .plastic cars or ther toys to the cabinet door. The idea is to form them NOT look like kitchen cabinet. In grown ups rooms you can go for a more sophisticated look possibly a poster or mounted shell collection or a romantic picture in a faux frame or shadow box hast become the cabinet door using the kind f door that have a finger grip under the top instead of visible hardware. I saw one dorm room where on earth there appeared to be a shelves of books on the wall over a desk that turned to be a totally clever covering for a cabinet. The books were in truth painted onto the cabinet door. Inside was a mini closet hlding jeans T's etc. A desperate student's solution to her roomie's hoging the closet space.

Consider a coat tree contained by winter or year roun for bulky coats and jackets next to space underneath for boots etc. You can consider things like a kitchen bench beside storage under the form, cabnets over the washer and dryer. Look at a the space you do have and see what you can create from it not merely what would usually be done.